Why the Beatles greatest hits album is topping the charts.
Published:
30 December 2000 y., Saturday
Why the Beatles greatest hits album is topping the charts. The Fab Four are keeping their legacy alive -- and then some
Although the Fab Four's new hits album, ''1,'' boasts exactly zero minutes of new material, it has become a surprise blockbuster. Following its mid- November launch, it debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, and has moved a reported 12 million copies worldwide and 3.3 million in the U.S. in its first five weeks. (That's already more than ''Help!'' has sold here since its 1965 release.)
Help is not something ''1'' needs a lot of. ''Everyone's buying it,'' says Steve Watson, senior buyer for L.A.'s Sunset Boulevard Virgin Megastore, who notes that at his store ''1'' is ''blowing away'' the latest discs from 'N Sync and the Backstreet Boys. Why the new Beatle invasion? Credit deeply discounted prices at stores like Wal-Mart (where ''1'' goes for $11.88 versus an $18.98 list price) and a smart marketing campaign that included direct response TV ads and remastered sound to lure audiophiles and completists. ''We had three weeks of big 800 number [TV] spots setting people up the same way as airplay would for a single, creating a consciousness,'' says Jeff Ayeroff, the former Virgin Records president who's overseeing ''1'''s marketing (the album is on the group's Apple label through Capitol). ''There are 27 No. 1 songs on it, so this is probably the best buy of any greatest hits record.'' Though many chart watchers were stunned by the Fab Four's staying power, Ayeroff scoffs, “It's not like Herman's Hermits did good. It is the Beatles, after all.''
The album's biggest asset, however, might have been some very savvy timing. ''1'' hit stores at a moment of renewed Fab fervor -- with a Nov. 17 ABC special (the two hour show drew 8.7 million viewers), the heavily hyped ''Beatles Anthology'' firmly on the bestseller lists despite its $60 price tag (more than 1 million copies sold so far), a fresh print of 1964's ''A Hard Day's Night'' in theaters, and the Nov. 13 kickoff of the Beatles' first ever official website. Not to mention, of course, that the album arrived just before the 20th anniversary of John Lennon's murder, an event commemorated by hundreds of fans Dec. 8 at Strawberry Fields in New York City's Central Park.
Šaltinis:
ew.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A group of public and private libraries from around the world is developing a free online reference service to answer research questions from a public often overwhelmed by the Internet's wealth of information and uncertain about its sources.
more »
Selling only 33,803 copies of their third LP Forever in the U.S. during its first week in stores, the Spice Girls are, according to a U.K. paper, calling it quits.
more »
Internet has produced a bumper crop of box-office flops of late, particularly on the entertainment front.
more »
Polish Right-Wing Party Protests Withdrawal Of Books From Frankfurt Book Fair.
more »
Most of Madonna's New York fans couldn't squeeze into her one-night-only mini-concert Sunday at Roseland, and then came more bad news.
more »
From `T' To `X' With Love: Robert Patrick Opens `The X-Files'
more »
Young Chinese pianist Li Yundi, 18, has won the 14th Frederic Chopin international piano competition which is held here every five years.
more »
BET, HarperCollins launch online venture.
more »
A panel discussion on "The Role of Memory in Eastern and Western European Literature" at the Vilnius Town Hall.
more »
The WB teen factory has churned out yet another angst-filled high school drama.
more »